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‘People occasionally get killed at work, it’s unfortunate but its part of life’
Rank: New forum user
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Lord Young actually said this, believe it or not - what do members think of this?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Well it is a true fact. Indeed, about 150 or so get killed every year. Many more if you include RTAs and health related diseases.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Appalling, but not surprising,
John
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Rank: Super forum user
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I don't think it is something that will ever be entirely prevented so I think it's an accurate observation.
That doesn't mean I think we shouldn't continue to strive to reduce it.
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Rank: Super forum user
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The statement it true - no problem.
People not at work also occasionally get killed by work activities i.e. the former ELO cellist who died recently as a result of a hay bale hitting his car.
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Rank: Forum user
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Unfortunate? Would he like to go and visit a widow and fatherless children and tell them that it's "unfortunate" that the man they loved is no longer alive, just because he went out to work to earn some money?
It's enough to make you give up work and go on the dole - it's safer! (tongue firmly in cheek - well, sort of!)
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Rank: Super forum user
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Smurf, Ray,
You forget the second clause of the sentence 'it's unfortunate'; well, it very often isn't, it's usually culpability rather than misfortune, in that context the comment is brutal, unsympathetic and appalling,
John
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Rank: Forum user
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Thinking about it again, it's his choice of words/turn of phrase that makes the statement so appalling, in my opinion. Saying that it's "unfortunate but it's part of life" implies that we should just accept it, but I completely disagree with that idea. We should not accept it, and as Safety Smurf said, we should continue to strive to reduce the number of workplace deaths.
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Rank: Forum user
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...it is unfortunate...and some are preventable... and others not..that is a fact of life people can be killed travelling to work or on a night out.
But anything that makes working practices safer has got to be a plus in anyones book.
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Rank: Super forum user
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The statement is correct. The choice of words to express is it - um - unfortunate....
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Rank: Super forum user
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Sorry, I read the sentiment not the semantic. Perhaps 'regrettable' might have been more appropriate.
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Rank: Guest
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Have to agree totally with JWK(John) on his comments.
Plus I held a door open once for Lord Young who walked straight through without even acknowledging I was there!! Never liked the man or his politics.
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Rank: Super forum user
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I tend to agree with what Youngy's said.
With the exception of the actual words and the sentiment.
Certainly ain't part of life. Is he reviving 'Volenti'?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Lord Young - Yes, he’s clearly good at engaging his mouth before using his brain!
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Rank: Super forum user
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What he is saying is correct - just he said it in a way that some people may consider insensitive. I'm a matter of fact person and so I didn't consider it insensitive. And yes I have sat with grieving widows so I am more than familiar with the real life consequences.
Some people's reaction to what he has said is what worries me.
Yes of course we should continue to prevent work place deaths where possible, no one is saying we shouldn't (not even Lord Young in his statement). Deaths will always occur because it is impossible to eliminate risk in life. Yes do what we can to prevent them but we do have to accept that some deaths will occur because as humans we are fallible.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Claire,
It's the invocation of fortune that's the problem; usually (not always, humans are fallible and no system is perfect) it's not firtune, it's an act of ommission or commission. Fortune is beyond our power to influence, acts are subject to modification. Sorry for being a bleeding-heart liberal, but it sounds very much to me like he's saying 'stuff happens, put up with it', which is a capitulation to chance and a denial of our human capacity to plan, and to influence events.
We only have to act SFARP, but SFARP, we have to act, not throw up our hands in despair and invoke fate,
John
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Rank: Super forum user
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And any death at work is unacceptable. It can never be acceptable.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Clairel, I’ve also been in that same awful position as you have. I think that this isn’t about what he’s trying to say - most would agree that deaths will occur, more to do with how he‘s said it and the implications from it.
Notebook - Could have done better!
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Rank: Forum user
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jwk stuff does happen..and we do have to put up with it....we can all try our best to prevent it..but it happens...as an ex member of hm forces...i cant recall any safety procedures that would have kept comrades from being injured and killed by other peoples action...apart from the government not sending them into areas of conflict...
All the people on here agree (with the odd exception exception) that accident do happen because we are human and falible..Lord youngs choice of words may not have been the best and i am sure we all are guilty of that..but we all strive to make the working environment as as safe as practicably possible.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Where and when did he make this remark and in what context? There are some areas of H&S Law that are human rights such as the duty to avoid as far as is reasonably practicable the risks someone is facing when doing his/her job. The European Court has accepted the concept of AFARP as it covers that that is outside human control, perhaps as Lord Dumbo is thinking. But the main point is he is a polition and they always speak with forked tongues but rarely without thinking exactly what they are saying and with several ways of getting out of it when the oposition to what they say is too great to ignore. As has been said on other postings there is a very large train of tought that our current legislation is fair and soundly based, the culture of claiming for every minor incident and the capitulation of the insurance companies to the easier side of things and put the price up to cover it is waht needs to be addressed.
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Rank: Forum user
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I too am ex-forces (and I still work with them) and would agree with the general statement that people do get killed at work and it's unfortunate. We have no influence over, say, enemy action and soldiers are 'at work'.
However, if he'd left the 'at work' part out of his statement, then it would have been better. I agree - his use of the word 'unfortunate' gives me the impression that he's OK with that and that we should blithely accept it as fact and I'm not comfortable with that view at all. Maybe we should consider the statement in the context of what else he said, but I have a suspicion it won't matter.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Not sure we should get too hung up on the semantics, albeit, 'unfortunate' is not the word I would have chose. As indicated by others, many workplace fatalities are preventable...if a SSoW had been adopted and followed. But we don't live in a perfect world.
Likewise, there are too many road related deaths, probably ten times more than workplace fatalities. Now, whether most of these are preventable is a matter of conjecture. Moreover, it is perversely a price that society appears to tolerate.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Very true, we also don’t address the work related deaths from occupational health to the same degree as workplace fatalities, even though these are far greater?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Lord Young is a lawyer, English law is about words and the meaning of words. Given that, his use of the word 'unfortunate' is, well, unfortunate. It's not about semantics, it's about sentiment,
John
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Rank: Super forum user
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Can we try some thought experiments. How would we feel if a politician said:
'People occasionally stabbed in the street, it's unfortunate but its part of life'
'Children occasionally get beaten to death by their parents, its unfortunate but its part of life'
'People's cars occasionally get stolen, its unfortunate but its part of life'
'People occasionally can't get medical treatment they need because hospitals are over-worked, its unfortunate but it part of life'.
All the statements above are true, for a given value of truth,
John
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Rank: Super forum user
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Two statements, both true:
"People occasionally get killed at work, it’s unfortunate but its part of life"
"People occasionally get killed at leisure, it’s unfortunate but its part of life"
As others have said, unfortunate is maybe insensitive, but both statements are true. The big difference is that we can do more to prevent death at work than we can to prevent death at leisure.
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Rank: Forum user
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Death is the ultimate destiny for us all. It is the last act of life: it is indeed the final part of life. So in that sense the statement is akin to the world is round, night follows day etc. However the manner of our departure from this earth is critical to each and every one of us.
For those dying in workplace accidents, their life is prematurely cut short. For the families and friends of those killed, the event is traumatic. The ones left are usually devastated. It is not ‘unfortunate’ it is tragic. People are taken before their time: that is the injustice of it.
However it is what the statement implies that is the problem. The definition of unfortunate includes ‘unlucky’ and ‘fateful’. This implies people die at work because they are unlucky: it happens. Get over it.
Yet each year the HSE produces accident reports that clearly identify many of the deaths occurred because of systematic failures in managerial control. In the odd incident the individual is deemed to be largely responsible for their own demise.
In most cases it was not a matter of luck, it was contrived. Some individuals have gone to jail because they were successfully prosecuted for the manslaughter of a worker. This is hardly reflects some unfortunate ‘Act of God’.
Yesterday BP opened up the first gambit in trying to share responsibility for 11 deaths, many injuries and billions of dollars of pollution with at least two other companies in the Deep Horizon oil rig explosion. While the final report will take some time yet, I’ll wager that:
‘the 11 died because they were unlucky’ will not be a conclusion: or
‘workers will need to improve their skills at being lucky’ will be a recommendation in the report.
The vast majority of people who are killed at work die because well known and easily available preventative solutions are not applied. This knowledge should not lead to some shrug of the shoulders and comments of ‘such is life’. It should make people angry. We cannot just accept death at work is inevitable. It should be a motivator to galvanise more effort into addressing the failures.
Workplace deaths are mainly the result of failures in managerial controls, not unfortunate, unlucky, fateful ‘Acts of God’.
To me the statement reads ‘People occasionally get killed at work, so what.’
Nigel
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Rank: Forum user
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jwk, I like the way you think and agree with pretty much everything you have said.
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Rank: Guest
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So what’s the point the good lord is trying to make (is there more information on context?). So fatalities are ‘unfortunate’ (ie characterized by undeserved bad luck; unlucky) and ‘part of life’. Most seem to result in (successful) prosecutions so therefore are the result of criminal acts, so generally, the result of an employer not doing all that was reasonably practicable. Is he playing the politicians trick of getting us to accept deaths at work as ‘part of life’, softening us up for a lowering of standards. How much could we increase the current number to a level which was more than ‘unfortunate’?
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Rank: Guest
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"The death of one man is a tragedy. The death of millions is a statistic" Another quote!!!
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Rank: Moderator
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Folks,
The secret of good debating is to attack the "subject" and not the "person".
Just to be clear, ad hominem attacks (against individuals) are likely to breach Forum Rule 2.
Carry on.
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Rank: Guest
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Rule 2 states
"2. You mustn’t antagonise other users or post any information that could be considered defamatory, obscene, abusive, offensive, inflammatory, unlawful or creates a risk to a person’s safety or health."
Everyone has used moderate language in the posting regarding this topic. Bar one statement, I think everyone has complied with to the letter of the rule. The content of Lord Youngs statement though, could be construed as offensive, inflammatory and create a risk to a person's safety or health (if the reader of the statement is a bereaved party).
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Rank: Guest
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Rank: Super forum user
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I don’t believe that ‘ad hominem’ applies in this case. As Ciarán has stated the use of words are hardly abusive or inflammatory; even though they are directed towards Lord Young, has he made a formal complaint?
Strong and opinionated yes, but that is an entitlement to freedom of speech in a civilised democracy.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Sorry Moderators for mentioning the word 'dunderhead' in a post.
Personally I find it abhorrently offensive for him to say that the death of my father, who died of emphysema recently after many years as a miner to be 'unfortunate', and 'a part of life'. We have personally been robbed of many years with our dad.
Maybe the good lord, sat in his very plush, H&S compliant office suite would see things differently if he was to suffer such a loss.
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Rank: Super forum user
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LOL!
You can't please all of the people all of the time.
In order to prevent the topic being locked for deviation, I suggest we search for the source of the quote, the context in which it was made and consider the audience.
After all it wouldn't look good if we'd all been taken for a ride by something mischievously misquoted would it?
So far, I have only come up with the following link on a blog, which quite clearly has it's spin:
http://blogs.mirror.co.u...ork-thats-unfortuna.html
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Rank: Super forum user
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Just to clarify (and perhaps make the point), the above is emphatically NOT aimed at the personal tragedies others have shared here.
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Rank: Super forum user
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‘ad hominem’ = “attack to the man” if my Latin is up to speed.
To all that have expressed a view, I believe that many on the forum are aware, that the term ‘ad hominem’ is not always misleading, for in some instances questions of personal conduct, character, motives, etc., are legitimate and relevant to the issue. This is certainly the case in the political forum in which Lord Young resides.
Worth noting that my early terminology (foot in mouth) has been used in public field for many decades and by virtue of custom would not be derived from the Latin as an “attack to the man” It has been used by many making a valid reasoning in the public eye including: The Queen; former Lord Chief Justice (Lord Wolf), even Winston Churchill to name a few….?
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Rank: Super forum user
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The remark was printed in the times, 19-June-2010 (paywall)
Have fun.
Done-deal springs to mind.
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Rank: Super forum user
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res ipsa loquitur
Bonum disputatio postulo libertas de sermo
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‘People occasionally get killed at work, it’s unfortunate but its part of life’
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